Overview

Overview

The birth data in this IBIS-Q query module come from the Utah Birth
Certificate database. The database is maintained by the Utah Department
of Health, Office of Vital Records and Statistics.

"Utah Small Areas" refers to a set of geographic areas in Utah with
population sizes ranging from approximately 16,000 to 80,000 persons.
These geographic areas are especially useful for doing public health
assessment in communities within Utah's urban counties. Utah Small Area
population numbers are not available for race, ethnicity, or single
year of age.

Getting Started

Follow the steps to narrow your query and display your results. When you are done
forming your query, click "Submit" bottom of the screen (last step) to get your
query result.

Step 1: Select year

(
Year: 2017
)

Select the years you would like to include in your analysis. The default is the most recent year.

Single years

Select from list of single years

Step 2: Select mother's race and medicaid status

Select the races and medicaid status you would like to include in your analysis.

Race

Medicaid status

Medicaid

Not Medicaid

Step 3: Select mother's age group

Select from list of mother's age groups

Step 4: Select mother's characteristics

Select other characteristics of the mother that you would like to include in your analysis. The default is all characteristics.

Education

Education level coding has been changed from year 2009. DO NOT combine 2009 and after data with previous years data on this selection

Education - Year 2008 and Earlier

Less than High School (0-11 years)

High School Graduate (12 years)

Some College (13-15 years)

College Graduate (16+ years)

Education - Year 2009 and Later

Marital status

Married

Not Married

Hispanic origin

Hispanic

Non-Hispanic

Pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI)

Underweight

Normal

Overweight

Obese

Adequacy of weight gain during pregnancy

Adequacy of weight gain during pregnancy coding has been changed from year 2010. DO NOT combine 2010 and after data with previous years data on this selection

Adequacy of weight gain during pregnancy

Adequacy of weight gain during pregnancy-Year 2010 and Later

Tobacco use during pregnancy

Yes

No

Alcohol use during pregnancy (Data collected until 2008)

Yes

No

Parity

Parity is the number of previous live-born children a woman has delivered, living or deceased. Select 0 if looking for information about the first child born to a woman.

Parity

0

1

2

3 or more

Mother's gestatonal diabetes (Data collected from 1997)

No diabetes

Gestational Diabetes

Pre-Existing Diabetes

Step 5: Select infant characteristics

Select the infant characteristics you would like to include in the analysis. The default is all characteristics.

Infant Sex

Both male and female

Male

Female

Gestational Age

Gestational Age is the period of time a baby is carried in the uterus or the duration of the pregnancy, measured from the first day of the last menstrual period. Full-term gestation is between 37 and 42 weeks.

Age of gestation

Size for Gestational Age

Small for gestational age (SGA) is a term used to describe a baby who is smaller than the usual amount for the number of weeks of pregnancy. SGA babies usually have birthweights below the 10th percentile for babies of the same gestational age. This means that they are smaller than 90 percent of all other babies of the same gestational age.

Large for gestational age (LGA) is a term used to describe a baby who is larger than the usual amount for the number of weeks of pregnancy. LGA babies usually have birthweights above the 90th percentile for babies of the same gestational age. This means that they weigh more than 90 percent of all other babies of the same gestational age.

Size at gestational age

Small

Apporpriate

Large

Single or multiple birth

Single Birth

Twins

Triplets

Quadruplets

Quintuplets or higher

Step 6: Select health care system characteristics

Select the health care system characteristics you want to include in your analysis. The default is all characteristics.

Number of Prenatal Care Visits

ACOG recommends the following prenatal care visit schedule:

1 visit per month (every 4 weeks) until week 28

2 visits per month (every 2 to 3 weeks) from weeks 28 to 36

1 visit per week from week 36 until birth

Certain medical conditions in pregnancy may necessitate more visits.

Number of prenatal care visits

Trimester that prenatal care began

Trimester coding has been changed from year 2009. DO NOT combine 2009 and after data with previous years data on this selection.

2008 and Earlier

No Prenatal Care

1-3 Months (first trimester)

4-6 Months (second trimester)

7-9 Months (third trimester)

2009 and later

No Prenatal Care

1-3 Months (first trimester)

4-6 Months (second trimester)

7-9 Months (third trimester)

Adequacy of prenatal care (Kotelchuck method)

Kotelchuck method coding has been changed from year 2009. DO NOT combine 2009 and after data with previous years data on this selection. Currently 2009 data is still in progress.

2008 and Earlier

Inadequate

Adequate

2009 and later

Inadequate

Adequate

Facility Where Infant Born

A tertiary care facility is a hospital with a unit that has continuously available personnel and equipment to provide life support for as long as needed. Tertiary care facilities are able to provide care to newborn infants with birthweights less than 1000 grams or gestational ages less than 28 weeks.

Facility where infant born

Tertiary care hospitals

Non-tertiary care

Birth method

Birth method coding has been changed from year 2009. DO NOT combine 2009 and after data with previous years data on this selection.

2008 and Earlier

Vaginal

Vaginal birth after C-section

Primary C-section

Repeat C-section

2009 and later

Vaginal

Vaginal birth after C-section

Primary C-section

Repeat C-section

Place of birth

Type of birth attendant

Birth attendant coding has been changed from year 2009. DO NOT combine 2009 and after data with previous years data on this selection.

2008 and earlier

2009 and later

Interpregnancy Interval

The interpregnancy interval is the time (in months) between the completion of one pregnancy resulting in a live born infant and conception of the next pregnancy.

Interpregnancy interval

Select from list of intervals

Step 7: Select resident or occurent births

(
All live births to Utah resident mothers regardless of where they occurred: All live births to Utah resident mothers regardless of where they occurred
)

Definitions

This option allows you to query birth data based on the residency status
of the mother and whether or not the birth took place in Utah.

Term Definitions:
* All Resident Births: all births to mothers who are Utah residents
* All Utah Births: all births that occured in Utah regardless of the mother's residency status
* All Resident Births in Utah: all births that occured in Utah to Utah mothers

Select the type of residence you would like to include in your analysis. Click on the term to see a more detailed explanation. The default is resident births.

All live births to Utah resident mothers regardless of where they occurred

All live births that occured in Utah regardless of the mother's residency status

All live births to Utah resident mothers which occurred in Utah

Step 8: Select Utah Small Area

(Geographic Area: all)

Default is all Utah Small Areas

Utah Small Areas

Health Improvement Index Classifications

Step 9: How to display the data

To display a map, you must select Geographic Area in
Display By (category) and None in Group By (series)

Display By (category)

Primary group by field

Defines the data's primary grouping dimension. The
primary grouping is required and also controls the
ordering of the result's data rows. In MS-Excel
and other graphing packages this is typically referred
to as the the "dataset's category". If viewing in a 2-d
table layout then this value/dimension is associated
with table's "row" values. Others will refer to this
value as the first "cross by" or the first dimension.

Group By (series)

Optional secondary group by field

Defines the 2nd field (or dimension) to be used to group
and aggregate values by. MS-Excel chart users will
commonly refer to this as the dataset's "series"
field. If viewing in a 2-d table layout then this
field is associated with data table's value columns.
Series group bys are optional. Maps and some charts,
like the "Pie" chart, are currently not programmed to
handle datasets that have more than one group by e.g.
they only work with the primary category type group
by being specified.

Chart

Optional chart graph

Defines the optional chart graphic to display.

NOTE: Maps and some charts, like the "Pie" chart, are
currently not programmed to handle datasets that have
more than one group by e.g. they only work with the
primary category type group by being specified. All
other charts will only work with a maximum of 2 group
bys e.g. if the fixed group by exists then the series
group by can NOT be used with charting or maps.

Map

Optional map graph

Defines the optional map graphic to display.

NOTE: Maps are only available when the category is
set to a geographical area and does not have a series
defined.

Primary Measure

Available Measures

Defines the primary measure value to display in the map and graph.

The data and information provided through the IBIS-PH Query System are
intended to support any individuals or entities engaged in activities
designed solely to enhance the well-being of a specific community, which
may include the State. Activities include informing evidence-based
decision making in the State to plan and improve health service delivery,
evaluate health care interventions and systems, and inform health policy
decisions. Other uses are not permissible.

As an IBIS-PH Query System user, I AGREE TO:

Use the data for statistical reporting and analysis only.

Avoid any attempt to identify or contact individual(s) represented in the IBIS-PH query system data.

Avoid disclosure or use of the identity of any individual(s) discovered inadvertently.

Avoid linkage of IBIS-PH query system data with other data that,
after linkage, might allow identification of an individual represented
in the IBIS-PH query system data.

Use appropriate safeguards to prevent the inappropriate use or
disclosure of individual(s) represented in the data, including when
disclosing IBIS-PH Query System data to others.

Report IMMEDIATELY any inadvertent or intentional identity disclosures or violations of this
agreement of which I become aware to the Director of the Center for Public Health Data,
Department of Health.

I understand that failure to adhere to the above stated agreement items
will result in loss of access to DOH Internet databases, and I may be
subject to legal penalties. Any use, release, or publication of health
data contrary to the provisions stated is a class B misdemeanor, with
subsequent violations being class A misdemeanors punishable by a fine
of up to $5,000 per offense (Chapter 23, Title 26, Code Annotated).
If I am a state government employee, this may be grounds for immediate
dismissal.

Utah DOH

Legal

Other

The information published on this
website may be reproduced without permission. Please use the following
citation: "Retrieved Sun, 15 September 2019
from the Utah Department of Health, Indicator-Based
Information System for Public Health Web site: http://ibis.health.utah.gov"

Page Content Updated: Thu, 20 Jun 2019 13:03:29 MDT

The information provided above is from the Department of Health's Center for
Health Data IBIS-PH web site (http://ibis.health.state.gov). The information published
on this website may be reproduced without permission. Please use the following citation:
"
Retrieved
Sun, 15 September 2019 6:51:40
from Department of Health, Center for Health Data, Indicator-Based Information
System for Public Health Web site: http://ibis.health.state.gov
".